The Writer’s Project

The Writer’s Project is built for writers who are done starting over.

Not writers who need another productivity trick.

Writers who need a way of working that holds up when life gets busy, when perfectionism flares up, and when self-doubt gets loud.

Every coaching engagement follows the same framework, because this is the structure that consistently produces change.

Weekly accountability check-ins

Every week we look at three things:

This isn’t about me policing you. It’s about eliminating the endless internal negotiation that keeps you stuck.

When someone is paying attention, you stop making vague promises. You start making decisions. Over time, that shift compounds.

Consistency isn’t a personality trait. It’s a practice.

Weekly mindset coaching sessions

Perfectionism.
Fear.
Burnout.
Imposter syndrome.
The spiral that turns one rough writing day into a week of avoidance.

We don’t just manage your calendar. We address the patterns driving your behavior.

Because if the mindset doesn’t change, the habit won’t either.

This is where identity work happens. Quietly. Practically. Through repetition.

Monthly realignment calls

Once a month we zoom out.

Are you still working toward the right goal?
Is your plan realistic?
Is something off that needs to be adjusted before frustration turns into quitting?

Most writers abandon projects because they don’t recalibrate soon enough. These calls prevent drift.

The structure stays the same.

What changes is how long you stay in it, and what becomes possible when showing up stops being optional and starts being normal.

If you are serious about finishing what you start, this program was built for you.

Book a discovery call and we’ll determine what level of support makes sense.

CHOOSE YOUR TIMELINE

The timelines are not contracts. They are commitments to a certain depth of work.

Different writers need different levels of intensity.

Progress Over Perfect

6 Weeks of Focused Breakthrough

If you have been rewriting the same chapter for months, you do not need a twelve-week identity journey. You need momentum.

Six weeks is short. That’s intentional.

When the deadline is tight, perfectionism has less room to breathe. You write. You move forward. You prove to yourself that imperfect progress is still progress.

This option is for you if you need a decisive shift.

Not reflection. Not theory. Movement.

If you are burned out or expecting to finish an entire novel in six weeks, this is not the right fit.

Becoming the Writer

12 Weeks of Identity-Level Change

Some writers don’t just struggle with consistency. They struggle with belief.

You want to stop hesitating when someone asks what you do.

You want the confidence that doesn’t vanish after a slow week.

Three months gives us space to dismantle the deeper patterns and rebuild something steadier.

This is where “I want to be a writer” becomes “I am one,” not because you declared it, but because your behavior supports it.

Unstoppable Writer

24 Weeks of Long-Term Accountability

Big projects require long-term support.

Six months allows for setbacks without collapse. Adjustments without abandonment. Momentum without burnout.

If you have a significant manuscript or a long history of quitting halfway through, this level of support changes the trajectory.

Not because it’s dramatic.

Because it’s consistent.

What You’re Investing In

Each session is $120.

Most clients use up to nine sessions per month when they want steady, immersive support.

You choose the level of commitment. The transformation comes from repetition, not from a calendar deadline.

If you are ready to stop restarting and build something that lasts, the next step is simple.

Book a discovery call.

We’ll look at where you are, what’s realistically required, and whether you’re prepared to commit to it.

No theatrics. No pressure.

Just a clear conversation about whether you’re ready to treat your writing like it matters.

One more thing you should sit with before you decide

How many times have you told yourself, today is the day?

How many Mondays have you quietly appointed as your fresh start, only to feel the plan unravel by midweek?

Not because you didn’t care.

Not because you weren’t serious.

But because you were relying on motivation, willpower, and good intentions to carry something that actually requires structure and support.

At some point, the problem stops being the writing.

The problem becomes the pattern.

The pattern of restarting.

The pattern of renegotiating.

The pattern of watching yourself back away from something you genuinely want, and then trying not to think too hard about it afterward.

Your brain is very good at protecting you from discomfort.

It will offer distractions.

It will offer new plans.

It will offer hope that next time will be different.

What it won’t offer is evidence.

Evidence only comes from showing up consistently, long enough for the debate to end.

That’s the moment The Writer’s Project is designed for.

Not when you feel inspired.

When you’re tired of repeating the same cycle and pretending it’s neutral.

You don’t need to be pushed harder.

You need a system that makes avoidance harder than showing up.

If you keep doing what you’ve been doing, you already know how this plays out.
You’ve lived that version.

The question isn’t whether you want to write.

The question is how much longer you’re willing to keep telling yourself the same story about why it hasn’t happened yet.

When you’re ready to stop testing your resolve and start changing the conditions, you know the next step.